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CONCRETE POEM
Prof
John Toth |
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(UC, KSD, P,
CLC)
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Text Design; Image as reflection
on a museum visit.
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Inquiry:
How
does language encourage and/or limit the reflection process.
How
do multiple intelligences address the limits of language?
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Objective: Explore ways in which language can be
used to “break out of the box” of its conventional way of transmitting
meaning.
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Activity: CONCRETE POEM (KSD)
The following suggestions should be helpful in the
creation of the concrete poem:
Begin by listing words
and phrases that spontaneously come to mind. Without censoring
anything, write down any words or sentence fragments that may come out
of your experience during the visual art workshop and museum visit. Refer to
your experience during the workshop and museum visit. You should connect to
the works of art you observed.
The next list should be more thoughtful. Make another list based on contextual information
(historical, cultural, and previous knowledge of the art objects, exhibitions
and so forth).
Arrange text to create a one paragraph, free verse poem.
Take your
poem and design the text into a visual reflection (equivalent / composition)
that compliments and enhances the meaning of the poem. You may do the text by
hand using any materials and colors you wish. You may use a computer. Pick a
font and size that visually
compliments the meaning of the poem. You can manipulate the words and
sentences on the computer. If this is too difficult, you may cut and paste. Your
concrete poem should be 81/2 by 11. If you glue text/images down, everything
must be flat. When we look
at the final work. Make sure that the text / image is well balanced. The
visual should not dominate. Do not use clip art or add any lines and pictures
other than images you make by composing the text. The reader should know where you want them to start
reading the poem.
Look
at the examples under this in the Course Documents for examples of Concrete
Poems. The content of these
examples are different from our assignment.
In a Concrete Poem, form
follows function. The poem's visual form reveals its content and is integral
to it. These are the features of such a poem:
http://www.gardendigest.com/concrete/cvp243.htm |